Bang Bang, You're Dead - Page 4

Even Rogerson, who didn't like much of the script (for obvious reasons), was generous in his praise of Roxburgh's portrayal. Having spent some time drinking with Rogerson and his mates, I can tell you the actor got it absolutely dead right: Rogerson was a mean-looking bloke in his prime, with icy blue eyes and blond hair and a stare that could send a cold shiver down your spine if you caught it at the wrong angle. You'd have hated to be a crim on the wrong end of an arrest by "The Dodger" and his mates.

For all that, he was also very charming company, and a great help as a contact. One time I went to meet him in an inner-city pub where we were joined by another hard-bitten former detective (who at police headquarters once asked me to pass him "that copy of the L-Z truth detector'', the thick and heavy second half-volume of the Sydney White Pages phone directory, more for a laugh at his own expense than anything else).

When they arrived, I'd already plonked myself at a table in the public bar, right in front of a floor-to-ceiling plate glass window looking on to busy Sussex Street. A grinning Rogerson, pointing to a darkened corner at the back of the hotel, said: "Mate, do you really think it's a good idea to sit here? Let's move over there, eh?'' And of course, we did.

Rogerson was alleged to have been involved in a whole string of crimes (including conspiracy to murder another detective who was shot through his kitchen window but survived), many of which were said to have starred a bloke called Neddy Smith, a self-confessed underworld killer who ended up doing life for a number of murders, and a nasty bloke known as Mr Rent-a-kill, an imported hitman from Melbourne named Chris Flannery who purportedly met a very nasty end.

But Rogerson never went down for anything much except a rort (caper) involving a vintage car and a dodgy bank account — oh, and the small matter of perjury. Yet if he really had been involved in everything people said he had, and it's unlikely he can take the rap for all of it, then he certainly wasn't alone. A subsequent royal commission into police corruption called by the New South Wales government uncovered evidence of ongoing and deeply entrenched systemic corruption that went from the comical, to the practise of "verballing'' suspects to make a brief of evidence stick, to allegations of some of the most heinous crimes imaginable. And it all made for fabulous newspaper fare.

Amid all the allegations of bribes and killings, my favourite front-page headline from the commission was this admission by a detective, expressed in 396pt type: "WE LIE UNDER OATH''. Well, shock, horror. A more newsworthy splash at the time time might have been: "We DON'T lie under oath''. However, the shootings and the clean-up of the cops had a bizarre and unintended effect: the old-style criminal underworld of Sydney and the network of corrupt police that had propped it up seemed to go in one fell swoop. As Rogerson himself admitted this week after watching Underbelly, the NSW coppers pre-royal commission kept tabs on everything, and kept the criminals in line, and there was honour among thieves (and by all reports hired killers, too, apparently). While the old-style crims shot each other, and met their ends after a quiet beer at the Cauliflower pub in inner-city Chippendale, or down in quiet suburban parks where they'd gone for late-night meetings, they rarely hurt anyone else. Certainly, there was often some thought given about who might be caught in the crossfire.

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Article Author: the silver surfer

The silver surfer lives in Sydney, rides longboards and shortboards, likes making waves and has an opinion on just about everything. His friends, family and employers wish he didn't

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  • 1 - Jonathan Scanlan

    Feb 16, 2008 at 3:45 am

    Surfer, I am sorry to have to say this but you really need to learn some history.

    Go pick up John Hirsts Sense and Nonsense in Australian History for a more accurate picture of the convict settlement.

    In fact, I have had a good look at some of the convict documents and the bulk of the transportation were white collar crooks. Then, once on the continent, they were treated like kings with rights to sue their employers for mistreatment and a free plot of land when they finished up.

    Brutality only emerged in a handful of of isolated cases.

  • 2 - STM

    Feb 16, 2008 at 3:57 am

    Oh dear, Jonathan. Maybe it's you who need to go back and study your history. The brutality of convict settlement is well documented. Try Port Arthur, Moreton Bay, Norfolk Island, Macquarie Harbour, the work camps west of Sydney and in the Blue Mountains. Then there were the penal settlements in WA.

    The white-collar crims DID do well, but the rest of them, mostly, didn't. Most of the criminals were NOT white-collar. I'm not going to argue with you, however. You have made a blanket statement about my lack of knowledge of Australian history when these things are not only well-documented, but a whole host of information is available out there to disavow your of your deluded and misguided belief that penal settlement on this continent wasn't violent.

    Off the top of my head, I can name one person here just in this story whose father did 7 years in Van Dieman's Land - Ned Kelly's father, and for rustling two pigs. I doubt whether most of the convicts who did suffer through that era would be convinced as to the veracity of your point of view were they alive today.

  • 3 - Jonathan Scanlan

    Feb 16, 2008 at 4:11 am

    oh sure, there was brutality, but it's probably overstated. To imply there was more than anywhere else in the world is inaccurate.

    Heck, when the men and women first hit the shore, an orgy broke out on sight since they hadn't seen the opposite sex in months of travel.

    But that's really beside the point.

  • 4 - STM

    Feb 16, 2008 at 4:31 am

    Jon, it WAS violent. It was brutal, in fact. No, perhaps not any different to anywhere else. Except that the convicts transported to Australia were little more than white slaves, and as an Aussie, you know this to be true as well as I do. The other big difference: convicts and their offspring formed the bulk of the population here at one stage, especially in the earler years of the first colony.

    However, this part of the story is only to offer an opinion on why Australians are so accepting of the kind of crime that sees gangsters dropping dead left right and centre, and why we just shrug our shoulders - because, as has been speculated by people more knowledgeable than me, it's part of the very fabric of our collective psyche.

  • 5 - STM

    Feb 16, 2008 at 4:43 am

    And remind me next time you post a story to be the first poster, and to shoot it down in flames in the first few moments :) I hate to be ageist, but you're saying I don't know our history. I do know it. The gangland wars are also part of our history, and I think I was out there living it while you were but a twinkle in your daddy's eye.

  • 6 - Jonathan Scanlan

    Feb 16, 2008 at 4:49 am

    Yeah, I know Stan. But is it really fair to call them slaves when they received a wage and could lodge complaints and sue their employer for mistreatment? Wage slaves and cheep labour maybe, but not slaves in the full sense of the word.

    It's a popular speculation that the convict past weighs heavily in the Australian psyche; but remember they were superseded by free settlers very quickly and never had an uprising.

    In fact, very few of present day Australians have any connection to the convict roots. If there is a generational legacy it could only have been passed down in the sorts of laws and institutions that have been developed and kept since that period.

  • 7 - Jonathan Scanlan

    Feb 16, 2008 at 4:54 am

    Any time Stan, I mean, half the time I write stuff is to get it denounced by the loonies that frequent these boards. :)

    Oh and while I'm at it... always wanted to tell you that Christmas article of yours from 06 is gold.

  • 8 - STM

    Feb 16, 2008 at 5:22 am

    Jon, thanks buddy. We love our Christmases in the sun. You'll kniow how hot it gets up in Queensland, which is where all my immediate family comes from.

    I'll just add here on the topic that it wasn't until the 1830s and the passing of the Magistrate's Act that convicts actually got a fair deal in terms of their punishments and their courts. Even then, the establishment was violently opposed to it - because they saw the convicts as scum who could be treated away from the norms people had come to expect from the British justice system.

    Indeed Governor Bourke passed the law because he was so affected by the brutality meted out to the convicts in NSW. He made a number of submissions to London in regard to it, which in turn led to simmering opposition to transportation among the public in Britain and eventually an outcry in that ultimately led to the end of the transports to WA. That is all very well documented, especially Bourke's correspondence.

    It was only in WA and Victoria that the convicts were treated reasonably, and even then not always.

    Places like Moreton Bay, Macquarie Harbour, Port Arthur and the Blue Mountains camps were indeed hell holes. I will never subscribe to the view that the convicts were well treated - until the very end and before the transports stopped.

    There is far too much evidence to suggest the exact opposite. You and the author of the book are entitledv to your views of course, but I don't believe they are right and plenty would agree with me, including serious historians.

  • 9 - STM

    Feb 16, 2008 at 5:36 am

    Doc Dread ... there is something very strange going on with the comments thread here (apart from the fact Jonno and I are going hammer and tongs). Any chance of fixing it up old boy before I belt my terminal with a sledgehammer???

  • 10 - Jonathan Scanlan

    Feb 16, 2008 at 8:35 am

    Well, most of my knowledge is from what I read during and since I undertook Australian History at uni, and in that case it was only one unit.

    I'll defer to your better judgement... in my own experience, most of the people who jump up and down about the violence and brutality of the convict settlements do tend to overstate things because their primary school teachers always tried to make it more exciting.

    Oh and yes, there does indeed seem to be a glitch with the comments.

  • 11 - Clavos

    Feb 16, 2008 at 10:51 am

    The comment problem stems from the peculiarities of the Southern Hemisphere (as opposed to the normality of the Northern). :>)

    Interesting article, SS. I know little about Aussie history, so it's a real eye-opener for me. While reading it, I reflected on the resiliency of the human spirit; that such a magnificent country as contemporary Australia is could have sprung from such inauspicious beginnings.

  • 12 - Dr Dreadful

    Feb 16, 2008 at 1:37 pm

    I don't know about a comment problem, but there does seem to be something cockeyed going on. The page layout is all over the place from where I'm sitting.

    I'll get on to Chris and see if he knows how to fix it.

  • 13 - Clavos

    Feb 16, 2008 at 1:49 pm

    Picky, picky, Doc. You knew my meaning...

    Chris CAN fix it (I think).

  • 14 - Dr Dreadful

    Feb 16, 2008 at 1:51 pm

    Fascinating piece, BTW, mate, and I wish you'd write more.

    I only know Richard Roxburgh from his portrayal of the effeminate and psychotic Duke in Moulin Rouge, so it's kind of hard for me to picture him in that sort of tough guy role.

    Highly unlikely that Underbelly will ever make it across the Pacific, of course, so I'll have to look for some clips on YouTube.

    That's how I get my fixes of Kath and Kim and Chaser, after all!

  • 15 - Ruvy in Jerusalem

    Feb 16, 2008 at 2:20 pm

    Interesting piece, Stan.

    It's helpful to be reminded from time to time what kind of hell an open air prison can be.

  • 16 - Christopher Rose

    Feb 16, 2008 at 2:32 pm

    The page looks fine to me. Anyone else having problems?

  • 17 - Jet in Columbus

    Feb 16, 2008 at 2:34 pm

    I don't see anything wrong, of course that's not a comment on the editoral content...

  • 18 - Dr Dreadful

    Feb 16, 2008 at 2:39 pm

    Oh, NOW it looks fine!

    I'll never understand the Internet, never...

    [shuffles off into corner, mumbling to self]

  • 19 - Lisa McKay

    Feb 16, 2008 at 4:21 pm

    It was the Amazon codes, surfer -- they get separated by commas, not semi-colons. It looks okay now because I fixed it a short while ago.

  • 20 - Silver Surfer

    Feb 16, 2008 at 10:47 pm

    Thanks Lisa and Doc ... I thought that might have been the problem. Must remember not to use semi-bloody-colons.

    Doc Dread, if you like Richard Roxburgh (I saw him recently in a movie set in Newcastle-Upon-Tyne where he stars with Justine Waddell and does a perfect Geordie accent - called the One and Only, and fantastic) you can get a copy of this in the US apparently. I say to Americans: if you can't understand the lingo, try bloody harder. It's not rocket science for anyone with an IQ above 65.

    It's one of the best shows I've seen, but I think it hasn't gone down well in the US because of the Aussie accents (well, it IS set in Australia, silly).

    I saw a review of it where the reviewer said it needed subtitles (lol) and suggested the storyline was improbable (whoops. The storyline is very close to what actually happened, the minor deviations being only for script and dramatic licence purposes).

    Truth sometimes is stranger than fiction.

    Apparently, the guy who wrote The Shield said he got most of his ideas from Blue Murder. I had to laugh a few weeks back when one of the posters on a gun thread here said the Australian police forces weren't known to be corrupt. Riiiight ...

    The actor who does Neddy Smith (Tony Martin) also gets the criminal just about perfect. That's wyhy it's so good.

    An old mate of mine also had one of the key roles, and proved to me once and for all that he's no ham actor - an affliction that seems to strike many of those of dramatic bent in this country.

    One in particular who'll remain nameless because I don't want any trouble :)

  • 21 - Dr Dreadful

    Feb 17, 2008 at 1:52 am

    Not Jason Donovan?

  • 22 - Silver Surfer

    Feb 17, 2008 at 6:41 am

    No, although ...

    The person is one who does a great American accent but reached his limit IMO pretending to be a pom.

    I think we've discussed this before, non??

  • 23 - troll

    Feb 17, 2008 at 7:44 am

    "The Roots of Violence are:
    Wealth without work,
    Pleasure without conscience,
    Knowledge without character,
    Commerce without morality,
    Science without humanity,
    Worship without sacrifice,
    Politics without principles"

    Gandhi

    ...just a reminder

  • 24 - Dr Dreadful

    Feb 17, 2008 at 1:45 pm

    @ #22:

    Aha! That guy...

  • 25 - STM

    Feb 17, 2008 at 8:01 pm

    #23 Troll ....


    Gandhi's never been that popular in Australia. We've never had much time for passive aggressives. Be aggressive or be passive, I say, but never both at the same time.

    Although there was a popular TV character here whose name was Mahatma Kote.

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